Stablecoin Rules Must Match How Stablecoins Actually Work 

The Digital Chamber submitted a comment letter to FinCEN and OFAC regarding their proposed rule on AML/CFT and sanctions compliance program requirements for permitted payment stablecoin issuers. 

Bringing permitted payment stablecoin issuers, or PPSIs, into a clear BSA/AML framework helps consumers feel confident, helps firms do their part to protect the U.S. financial system and support law enforcement. 

At the same time, TDC urged FinCEN and OFAC to clarify the final rule so it reflects how payment stablecoins actually operate. The key point is simple: issuing a payment stablecoin is not the same as intermediating every transaction in which that stablecoin is later used. 

Why It Matters 

Payment stablecoins can strengthen U.S. payments, expand access to dollar-denominated digital value, and support responsible innovation. The current proposed rules could create obligations that no issuer can realistically meet. 

TDC’s letter focuses on several core points: 

  • PPSIs should be responsible for their own direct activities, such as issuance, redemption, custody, hosted wallet services, or other customer-facing services. 
  • PPSIs should not be required to monitor, report on, or serve as the compliance intermediary for all secondary-market activity merely because they issued the stablecoin. 
  • Recordkeeping, Travel Rule, SAR, and sanctions obligations should apply to the entity with the customer relationship, transaction role, custody, control, or legal ability to act. 
  • Blockchain analytics, digital identity, ecosystem monitoring, and AI-enabled tools can improve compliance, but they should not create broad secondary-market surveillance duties for PPSIs. 
  • FinCEN and OFAC should provide clearer guidance on when PPSIs must block, freeze, reject, seize, burn, or otherwise prevent transfers. 
  • Regulators should account for downstream risks to innocent users when stablecoins are frozen, seized, or burned inside decentralized protocols, liquidity pools, automated market makers, or other shared on-chain systems. 

TDC’s Take 

TDC supports strong AML/CFT and sanctions compliance for stablecoin issuers. But compliance obligations must be tied to the role an issuer actually plays. 

When a PPSI directly issues or redeems stablecoins for a customer, it can collect information, screen wallets, use blockchain analytics, conduct due diligence, and maintain records. But once a stablecoin moves through exchanges, custodians, merchants, self-custodied wallets, decentralized protocols, or smart contracts, the issuer often does not know the sender or recipient, does not hold the customer’s assets, and does not control the transaction. 

That distinction matters when regulators require an issuer to freeze, seize, burn, or restrict stablecoins. In a custodial setting, that action may affect a specific account or wallet. In a decentralized liquidity pool or automated market maker, the same action could disrupt pricing, liquidity, collateral, or protocol operations for users with no connection to the enforcement target. 

TDC also urged FinCEN and OFAC to provide safe harbors or mitigating-factor treatment for PPSIs that act in good faith to comply with lawful orders while taking reasonable steps to limit harm to innocent users, liquidity providers, protocol participants, and other third parties. 

Taken together, these stablecoin compliance recommendations will create rules that are both strong and workable. 

What’s Next 

TDC will continue working with regulators and industry to ensure the final rule aligns realistic compliance obligations with customer relationships and asset control. Done right, the rule can support effective enforcement while giving responsible PPSIs the clarity they need to build in the United States. 

TDC CEO Testifies at Senate Banking Hearing Entitled: The Affordability Agenda

Cody Carbone
Chief Executive Officer, The Digital Chamber
U.S. Senate Committee on Banking, Housing, and Urban Affairs
Hearing Entitled: “The Affordability Agenda”
Tuesday, June 23, 2026


Chairman Scott, Ranking Member Warren, and members of the Committee, thank you for the opportunity to testify today.

My name is Cody Carbone, and I serve as Chief Executive Officer of The Digital Chamber, the world’s largest digital asset and blockchain trade association. Founded in 2014, our members include more than 250 companies globally across the digital asset and blockchain ecosystem, including exchanges, custodians, infrastructure providers, banks, developers, investors, and emerging technology companies working to build a safer, more competitive, and more inclusive financial system.

I am here today to offer solutions to the challenge of affordability weighing on Americans. The cost of accessing, moving, saving, and investing money should not be a barrier to any of these basic economic activities. The goal of the digital asset industry is to make it as easy to send money as it is to send an email.

For too long, American consumers and small businesses have been forced to operate on financial rails that are slow, expensive, and often difficult to access. These costs rarely appear as a single line item on a receipt, but they show up everywhere: in the price of groceries, in fees charged to small businesses, in the cost of sending money to family abroad, in the delay between earning a paycheck and being able to use it, and in the thousands of dollars families
must pay to close on a home.

That is the hidden affordability problem digital assets can help solve.

Digital assets and blockchain technology will not, on their own, slow inflation, increase the housing supply or wages, or fix every cost pressure facing Americans. But they can reduce the impact of friction and fees and offer competitive alternatives across the global financial system.

This matters most for households with the least room for error. The Federal Reserve reported in May 2026 that only 63 percent of adults could cover a hypothetical $400 emergency expense using cash, savings, or the equivalent – meaning more than one-third could not do so without borrowing, selling something, or being unable to cover the expense at all. 1The same survey found that 59 percent of adults had at least one major unexpected expense in the prior 12 months, with major vehicle repairs, home or appliance repairs, and major medical expenses among the most common.2

The FDIC’s most recent national household survey found that 4.2 percent of U.S. households – approximately 5.6 million households – were unbanked in 2023, while another 14.2 percent – approximately 19 million households – were underbanked.3 These are the Americans most likely to rely on costly, high-interest stopgap measures such as check cashing, money orders, payday loans, pawn shops, and other nonbank financial services.

Even for banked consumers, delays and fees are real and costly. Consumers paid more than $5.8 billion in overdraft and nonsufficient-fund fees in 2023, even after many institutions reduced those charges from pre-pandemic levels.4 And under Regulation CC, funds from many local checks generally do not have to be made fully available until the second business day after deposit, with only the first $275 generally required to be available by the first business day.5 For a household living paycheck to paycheck, that delay is not an inconvenience. It is a cost.

Digital assets can help lower costs in three areas to directly address the challenge of affordability: cross-border payments, everyday merchant payments, and the transfer and ownership of assets.

First, digital assets can reduce the cost of cross-border money transfers.

The United States is the largest source of remittances in the world. The International Organization for Migration has reported that the United States has consistently been the top remittance-sending country, and World Bank bilateral estimates have placed U.S. outward remittance flows at approximately $200 billion in a recent year.

6Globally, remittances to lowand middle-income countries were estimated to reach $685 billion in 2024 and were forecast by
the World Bank to reach approximately $690 billion in 2025.7

The World Bank’s Remittance Prices Worldwide database reported that the global average cost of sending remittances was 6.36 percent in its latest available report, more than double the international target of 3 percent.8 At that price, a worker sending $200 home may lose more than $12 to fees before the money even reaches the intended recipient. Across hundreds of billions of dollars in global remittances, those fees represent a significant economic loss for working families.

The problem is that cross-border payments often depend on multiple parties, different systems, different time zones, currency conversion, compliance checks, and settlement processes that were not designed for the modern digital economy. GENIUS Act regulated US dollar-backed stablecoins can help reduce that friction.

A payment stablecoin can move value globally, around the clock, over blockchain-based infrastructure. While on-ramps, off-ramps, foreign exchange, compliance, custody, and wallet services may still involve costs, the underlying payment rail tends to be faster, more
transparent, and more efficient than many legacy cross-border systems.

The same problem affects American freelancers, contractors, and small businesses. For example, a designer in South Carolina working for a client in Europe, a software developer in Arizona paid by a company in Asia, or a manufacturer in Ohio paying an overseas supplier all face the same basic problem: global payments are slow and expensive, creating a burden on those working to innovate and grow much-needed jobs in their communities.

That is why business-to-business payments have become a fast-growing real-world use case for stablecoins. McKinsey estimated in February 2026 that B2B stablecoin payments accounted for roughly $226 billion, or about 60 percent of global stablecoin payment volume, and that B2B stablecoin payments had increased 733 percent year over year.9 Artemis, Castle Island Ventures, and Dragonfly similarly found significant growth in stablecoin payment activity, including B2B use cases such as treasury operations and cross-border settlement.10

Businesses are using these tools because the payment rails are secure and fast. Lower-cost cross-border payments make American workers and American businesses more competitive, and all American consumers deserve access to these innovations.


Second, digital assets can put competitive pressure on the cost of everyday payments.


Federal Reserve data show how central card payments have become to everyday commerce. In 2024, credit cards accounted for 35 percent of consumer payments by number, and debit cards accounted for another 30 percent. Cash accounted for 14 percent.11

The cost of accepting card payments is material. In a 2025 report, the Government Accountability Office found that selected federal entities collected approximately $43.6 billion from consumers using credit, debit, and other payment cards in fiscal year 2023 and paid approximately $784 million in related fees. Those fees equaled 1.8 percent of revenue, and interchange fees accounted for nearly 90 percent of the fees paid by those entities.12

Federal Reserve data also show that payment network fees are significant. In 2023, network fees to all parties in debit card transactions increased to $12.95 billion, and acquirers and merchants paid 64.9 percent of those network fees.13

For large businesses, payment acceptance costs are a major operating expense. For small businesses operating on thin margins, they can be especially difficult to absorb. And because payment costs are part of doing business, they can affect prices, margins, wages, investment, and consumer choice.

Blockchain-based payment rails can introduce another option.

A regulated dollar-backed stablecoin can settle faster and often at lower cost than many traditional payment methods. Stripe, for example, lists stablecoin payment acceptance at 1.5 percent of the transaction amount in U.S. dollars, including conversion to fiat, wallet and AML screening, fraud prevention, and gas sponsorship.14 Stripe has also stated that stablecoin transfers typically incur flat network fees, often measured in pennies, and that for certain
businesses, stablecoin payments can cost about half as much as other payment methods.15

Properly regulated dollar-backed stablecoins can allow certain payments to settle faster, with greater transparency, and with a different cost structure than legacy payment systems. They should not replace cards, cash, ACH, wire transfers, or other payment methods. Different payment methods serve different needs, and consumers should be empowered with the best choices possible for their individual needs and preferences.

A cheaper, faster, compliant payment rail can give merchants more choices. It can allow businesses to experiment with lower-cost payment options. It can create pressure for incumbent payment systems to improve. And over time, greater competition in payments can benefit consumers.

It is also consistent with the way American markets work best. When a new rail can move the same dollar more efficiently, the answer should not be to block it. The answer should be to regulate it properly, supervise it effectively, and allow responsible market participants to compete.

That competition matters for small businesses. A family-owned restaurant, a local grocery store, a contractor, a barber shop, or an online seller may not have the bargaining power of a national retailer. Safer, more compliant, lower-cost options position businesses better to compete, invest, hire, and serve their customers.

Consumers benefit when payment systems compete, especially when innovation happens under U.S. rules, rather than in offshore markets where American regulators have less visibility to protect consumers.

Because of this Committee’s leadership, Congress has already taken a major step. The GENIUS Act created a federal framework for payment stablecoins, including requirements for reserve backing, public reserve disclosures, supervision, and compliance. That framework can help give consumers, businesses, banks, and regulators greater confidence that payment stablecoins are backed, redeemable, supervised, and compliant.16

Third, digital assets can reduce barriers to owning and transferring assets.

Tokenization is the process of representing ownership, rights, or claims on a blockchain. That can include financial assets, such as funds, bonds, Treasuries, private credit, collateral, and commodities. But it can also include real estate interests, invoices, receivables, warehouse receipts, supply chain records, intellectual property royalties, energy credits, and other records of ownership or entitlement.

That matters because today, too many markets still rely on fragmented, paper records and duplicative processes. One system records ownership. Another verifies documents. Another sends payment instructions. Another clears the transaction. Another settles it. Another reconciles the records after the fact.


Tokenization can help reduce that friction by allowing ownership records, transfer instructions, payment, settlement, and verification to operate through a shared digital infrastructure. That can mean clearer records, faster settlement, stronger auditability, fewer duplicative checks, and lower administrative costs.

This matters across the economy.

For funds and securities, tokenization can make issuance, subscriptions, redemptions, transfer agency functions, and investor recordkeeping more efficient.

For Treasuries and collateral, it can help assets move more efficiently through the financial rules and regulations that support the markets Americans rely on every day.

For small businesses, tokenized invoices and receivables can help verify payment rights, improve recordkeeping, and unlock working capital faster.

For supply chains, tokenized warehouse receipts and inventory records improve transparency and accuracy about who owns what, where it is, and when it changed hands.

And for real estate, tokenization can help modernize one of the most expensive and paperheavy transactions most Americans will ever experience.

When a family buys a home, thousands of dollars can be consumed by the process of transferring ownership, verifying title, moving funds, recording documents, and closing the transaction. Closing costs often range from 2 to 5 percent of the purchase price, not including the down payment.17

On a $350,000 home, which is currently lower than the median U.S. average price, that can mean $7,000 to $17,500 before a family receives the keys.

While those costs pay for important protections, it should concern everyone on this Committee that the largest financial transaction most Americans will ever make still depends on a process that can be fragmented, paper-heavy, duplicative, and expensive.

Homeownership is already hard enough, especially for first-time buyers. Fannie Mae has found that closing costs are a meaningful obstacle for first-time and low-income homebuyers. In an analysis of approximately 1.1 million home purchase loans acquired in 2020, Fannie Mae found that more than 14 percent of low-income first-time homebuyers had closing costs equal to or exceeding their down payment.18

Modernizing record-keeping, including proof of ownership, transferring value, and settling transactions, are a few ways to make life easier for our neighbors through transparency, reducing duplicative verification, improving auditability, and expanding efficient pathways for transferring interests in assets, rights, and records.

Beyond lowering costs, tokenization can be a key to unlocking access to ownership by reducing the cost of entry for large-scale investments.

Fractional ownership, when properly regulated, can allow participation in smaller increments while preserving investor protections, disclosures, custody standards, suitability requirements, transfer restrictions, and market integrity rules.

That expands wealth-building opportunities beyond those with existing wealth. Though not yet operating at a national scale, the potential is easy to see in the efforts made so far to tokenize and offer small shares for investors to buy and hold.
Major financial institutions, asset managers, technology companies, and market participants are already building toward a more efficient model for issuing, owning, transferring, and administering assets, rights, and records. Citi Institute projected in June 2026 that the global tokenized asset market could grow from approximately $17 billion today to $5.5 trillion by 2030.19 McKinsey has estimated that tokenized market capitalization could reach approximately $2 trillion by 2030, excluding cryptocurrencies and stablecoins.20

Those projections are not a guarantee. They show where markets are moving. A critical question that only Congress can answer is whether that activity will happen under U.S. rules, with U.S. regulators serving U.S. consumers and businesses, or whether it will move offshore.

Regulators are now implementing the GENIUS Act through rules governing issuer supervision, reserve standards, custodial and safekeeping requirements, Bank Secrecy Act obligations, sanctions compliance, and customer identification requirements.21

The GENIUS Act was a major bipartisan accomplishment. It showed that Congress can create clear rules for digital assets that support innovation, protect consumers, and give regulators the tools they need.

And we recognize the heavy lifting this committee has continued to do to ensure consumers, innovators, and regulators can build onshore with confidence.

On May 14, 2026, this Committee advanced the Digital Asset Market Clarity Act by a bipartisan vote of 15 to 9.22 That vote matters because market structure is the foundation for responsible digital asset innovation, and because digital asset regulation should not be partisan.

A clear market structure framework will define who the primary regulator is for what kind of token, what disclosures are required, how intermediaries must operate, how customer assets are protected, and how illicit activity is policed.

This matters for affordability because uncertainty carries a real cost. Muddy, antiquated regulations push responsible companies to divert resources from product development to legal and compliance, and cause banks and regulated financial institutions to hesitate to engage in emerging and more efficient products. Consumers are left with fewer regulated options, and regulators are forced to oversee a market without clear statutory tools.

The better approach is clear, durable law: a framework that defines regulatory authority, and gives innovators commonsense rules and obligations to ensure consumers can confidently participate in the market and have long-term protections.

Digital assets are not a silver bullet for affordability, but they are a practical tool for reducing financial friction.

Digital assets can help lower those costs, but only if Congress provides the clarity needed to build responsibly.

The Digital Chamber and our members are committed to supporting fair, responsible regulation. We support strong consumer protections with clear rules for market participants and innovators. Such a framework encourages and supports innovation in the United States.

If you have any questions, please reach out to press@digitalchamber.org.

Latin America’s Surge in the Global Race to Adopt Stablecoins

The GENIUS Act established the first federal framework for stablecoin issuance in the U.S. in July 2025. In the year since, stablecoin transfer volume has reached roughly $4.5T in Q1 2026. Latin American countries are seeing that success and are working to establish regulations that will likely fuel more crypto adoption in traditional finance in the region. Notably: 

  • Brazil was among the first Latin American countries to adopt such regulations through its “Virtual Assets Law.”  
  • Bolivia reversed its decade-long crypto ban in June 2024. 
  • Argentina introduced mandatory exchange registration in 2025, and many more frameworks are being developed in these markets.  

As adoption and regulation of stablecoins have pushed Latin America’s crypto market into more commercial use cases, 71% of Latin American institutions have already begun using stablecoins for cross-border payments, the highest regional adoption rate globally. Additionally, on-chain crypto volume in the region rose 60% year-over-year in 2025, driven largely by stablecoins.  

While the drivers of adoption differ, the common effect is that in 2025, there was $324 billion in stablecoin transaction volume across LATAM, representing an 89% year-over-year surge. In Brazil, currently over 90% of all crypto flows are stablecoin-related, and over 60% in Argentina. Hotels, restaurants, and tourism businesses are also beginning to accept stablecoin payments directly from international visitors, saving both businesses and tourists millions previously lost to exchange rates and credit card fees

Business-to-business (B2B) stablecoin volumes grew 30x globally in the past two years, and Latin American businesses, banks, and fintechs have been among the first to widely adopt stablecoins.  

  • Mizuho research reports that remittance fees via stablecoins in the US-Mexico corridor are now under 1%, a major improvement for consumers compared to the 5% to 7% average fees charged by traditional money transfer services.  
  • Across the $142 billion that U.S. individuals sent to Latin America in 2025, if conducted through low-cost stablecoin infrastructure, this could result in $6.1-8.9 billion in consumer savings. 

As regulations become clearer and adoption continues to grow, stablecoins are likely to play an increasingly important role in payments, savings, and cross-border transfers throughout Latin America.  

Five State Blockchain Leaders Awarded First TDC State Network Grants at the DC Blockchain Summit 2026

Five organizations from across the United States were recognized at the DC Blockchain Summit as the first recipients of The Digital Chamber’s State Network grants. The program supports grassroots leaders advancing digital asset education, non-partisan policy development, and adoption at the state level.

Last week at the DC Blockchain Summit, The Digital Chamber’s State Network announced the first-ever recipients of its competitive grant program. Selected from 41 applicants nationwide, five organizations from Illinois, Maryland, Michigan, Utah, and West Virginia were recognized for their work advancing digital asset education and policy in their states.

Why it matters:
State governments are playing an increasingly important role in shaping the regulatory environment for digital assets. By supporting grassroots leaders who are working directly with policymakers and communities, TDC’s State Network aims to accelerate education, collaboration, policy development, and responsible blockchain adoption across the country.

“TDC’s State Network is about empowering grassroots leaders advocating for smart digital asset policy in their states,” said Anastasia Dellaccio, Executive Director of TDC’s State Network. “These organizations are on the front lines of digital asset policy development, and the work they are doing to develop sensible solutions at the state level is critical to the future of the industry nationwide.”

Each organization received $2,000 in funding to support projects that strengthen engagement between policymakers, industry leaders, and local communities.

Meet the 2026 Grant Recipients

Convergence Tech Policy Institute (C:TPI)
C:TPI is a global think tank in Illinois, focused on the intersection of AI, blockchain, and quantum policy. With support from this grant, the organization will host a reception during the National Conference of State Legislatures (NCSL) Summit in Chicago this July, bringing together policymakers and technology leaders to discuss cybersecurity and emerging technology governance.

Maryland Blockchain Association (MDBA)
The Maryland Blockchain Association is a nonprofit coalition uniting industry, government, and academia to advance Bitcoin, Web3 innovation, and responsible digital asset policy across the state. Led by Jacqueline Cooper, Esq., known in the community as “CryptoMom2,” MDBA is actively engaged in shaping Maryland’s legislative landscape on issues ranging from blockchain real estate applications and cryptocurrency staking to stablecoin legislation and the state’s Digital Asset and Blockchain Technology Task Force. Their grant will support Blockchain Bootcamp, a career-focused conference coming to Maryland this July.

Detroit Blockchain Center (DBC)
The Detroit Blockchain Center is Michigan’s premier 501(c)(3) organization, focused on blockchain, crypto, AI, and emerging technology education. Founded in 2018, the organization helps individuals and institutions better understand decentralized technologies while supporting startups building in the state. The grant will help launch DBC’s policy education track, including legislative roundtables, fireside discussions, and voter education content designed to make digital asset policy more accessible to Michigan stakeholders.

Utah Blockchain Coalition (UBC)
The Utah Blockchain Coalition advances blockchain-focused public policy initiatives and works to educate government officials on the benefits of the technology. With this grant, UBC will convene elected officials, innovators, and policy advocates for a working session on key blockchain trends and how Utah can position itself for responsible digital asset adoption.

West Virginia Blockchain Foundation
The West Virginia Blockchain Foundation connects legislators, universities, and communities across Appalachia to the economic and technological opportunities created by blockchain and emerging technologies. Their grant will support a series of in-person and virtual policy education workshops engaging state legislators, county officials, student leaders, and community stakeholders across West Virginia and the greater Ohio Valley.

What’s Next

These five organizations represent the kind of grassroots leadership driving progress in digital asset policy at the state level. As they begin implementing their projects throughout 2026, The Digital Chamber’s State Network will continue supporting their work through collaboration, resources, and connections across the digital asset ecosystem.

If you missed the announcement at the DC Blockchain Summit, you can watch the full session here.

TDC’s State Network Announces its First Competitive Grant Winners  

Washington, DC (March 17, 2026) — At the DC Blockchain Summit today, The Digital Chamber awarded the first TDC State Network grants to organizations from Illinois, Maryland, Michigan, Utah, and West Virginia. These groups stood out from 41 applicants for their action-oriented proposals aimed at advancing education, policy development, and adoption of digital assets in their states.  
 
“TDC’s State Network is about empowering grassroots leaders that are advocating for smart digital asset policy at the state level.  We have found the best way to support these local builders, many of whom are volunteers, is to provide funding that allows them to turn their policy initiatives into action. These leading organizations are on the front line of digital asset policy action in their states, and the contributions they make towards developing sensible policy solutions at the state level is critical to the future of the industry across the nation.” said State Network’s Executive Director, Anastasia Dellaccio. 
 
Each recipient was selected based on key criteria, including stated goals and policy alignment with TDC’s digital assets policy goals, and will receive $2000 to continue to grow in their community. 

The recipients announced today at the DC Blockchain Summit are: 
 
Illinois: The Convergence Tech Policy Institute (C:TPI) from Illinois is a global think tank mapping AI, blockchain, and quantum policy collisions to deliver trusted safeguards before $10T+ in infrastructure is at risk. They plan to build the Policy Convergence Index™ and Chicago Accord to secure a quantum-safe internet—where tech converges, policy leads. With their grant money, they plan to host a reception during the National Conference of State Legislatures (NCSL) summit in Chicago, July 27-29, 2026, focused on the NCSL Tech & Communications Committee and the NCSL Cyber-security & Privacy Task Force.  

Maryland: The Maryland Blockchain Association (MDBA) is a nonprofit coalition that is focusing on uniting and educating industry, government, and academia within Maryland to advance Bitcoin, Web3 innovation, and responsible digital asset policy throughout the state.  This year, the MDBA will be hosting a major conference, the Blockchain Bootcamp, bringing industry participants to Maryland to exhibit and lead career development workshops from July 13th to July 17th. This will be the first major conference in Maryland focusing on blockchain and related technology career opportunities. Under the leadership of Jacqueline Cooper, Esq.—a prominent legal expert, educator, entrepreneur, and author known as “CryptoMom2″—the association focuses on bridging knowledge gaps and fostering a skilled workforce for high-demand careers in the digital economy. In 2026, the MDBA is actively shaping Maryland’s legislative landscape by participating in supporting education across a variety of introduced legislation to include blockchain applications (real estate), cryptocurrency staking, a stablecoin reserve bill, and the formalization of the state’s Digital Asset and Blockchain Technology Task Force, and as well as advocating for commercial law updates to the Uniform Commercial Code.  The Association and the volunteers supporting the organization continue to empower Marylanders with the technical literacy and tools necessary to thrive in the “Regulatory Renaissance.” 

Michigan: The Detroit Blockchain Center (DBC) is the state’s premier 501(c)(3) dedicated to blockchain, crypto, AI, and emerging tech education. As the leading blockchain educator, formed in 2018 in Michigan, the Detroit Blockchain Center helps individuals and organizations better understand blockchain/web3 technology; attracts and encourages outside investments into businesses building on decentralized systems in Michigan; and creates opportunities for area blockchain/Web3 startups and entrepreneurs. This grant will serve as a seed investment to launch and strengthen DBC’s policy education track, delivered through events, legislative roundtables, fireside discussions, and voter education/awareness content that translates digital-asset policy into plain language for Michigan stakeholders. 

 
Utah: The Utah Blockchain Coalition is an association in Utah that drives blockchain-centric public policy initiatives to educate government officials about the benefits of blockchain technology and a strong community ecosystem in Utah. With this grant, the UBC plans to convene elected officials, innovators, and policy advocates for a discussion and informative working session around key blockchain trends and how Utah should position itself legislatively for digital asset adoption. 
 
West Virginia: The West Virginia Blockchain Foundation works to expand digital asset education and economic opportunities by connecting legislators, universities, and communities across Appalachia to the benefits of blockchain and emerging technologies. With this grant, the WV Blockchain Foundation will deliver a series of in-person and virtual blockchain policy education workshops designed to engage state legislators, county officials, student leaders, and community stakeholders across West Virginia and the greater Ohio Valley. 

ABOUT THE DIGITAL CHAMBER’S STATE NETWORK  

The Digital Chamber’s State Network, a project of The Digital Chamber, is a non-partisan program that establishes a collaborative ecosystem connecting policymakers, regulators, industry, and innovators to advance blockchain adoption and digital asset integration across the United States.  
  
ABOUT THE DIGITAL CHAMBER  

The Digital Chamber is a non-profit organization committed to promoting global blockchain adoption. We envision a fair and inclusive digital and financial ecosystem where everyone has the opportunity to participate. Access to digital assets is not merely a technological advancement but a fundamental human right, crucial for economic and social empowerment. Through targeted education, advocacy, and strategic collaborations with government and industry stakeholders, we drive innovation and shape policies that create a favorable environment for the blockchain technology ecosystem.   

The Digital Chamber’s umbrella includes: CryptoUK, Digital Power Network (DPN), TDC’s Digital State Network, and Treasury Council.  

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For media inquiries, contact press@digitalchamber.org   

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TDC’s State Network Opens 2026  Microgrant Application Process   

Applications online now, deadline February 6

Washington, DC – (January 16, 2025) — Today, The Digital Chamber’s State Network (TDC State Network) officially opened the 2026 microgrant application process. This series of five grants, each for $2,000, is designed to fund and scale state-based blockchain organizations that are advancing blockchain policy engagement and programming. The State Network microgrant program is about meeting innovation where it actually happens, in states, communities, and classrooms across the country.  

By investing directly in local leaders and grassroots organizations, those closest to the real-world impact are empowered to engage constructively with policymakers and help shape smart, durable digital asset policy. This investment reflects our belief that lasting progress is built from the ground up and that strong state-level partnerships are essential to America’s leadership in the digital economy.  

State blockchain associations, university blockchain clubs, and community innovation groups are encouraged to apply here. Applications for 2026 are due by February 6, 2026, and winners will be announced live on stage at The Digital Chamber’s DC Summit on March 17-18. 

In addition to the grant, the winners will receive 2 tickets to The Digital Chamber’s DC Summit in March and are encouraged to accept their award in person.  
 
“The Microgrant Program will serve to strengthen and scale grassroots, nationwide blockchain advocacy groups that form the backbone of digital asset advocacy across the country.  Many of these groups are volunteer-led and operate with limited resources, yet they play a critical role in educating policymakers and communities at the local level. These groups are often volunteer led, allowing them to continue building and strengthening local efforts. We are proud to provide tangible support to these groups that are on the frontline of educating policy makers and their communities on the benefits of developing principled digital asset policy,” said Anastasia Dellaccio, Executive Director of TDC’s State Network.  

ABOUT THE DIGITAL CHAMBER’S STATE NETWORK 

The Digital Chamber’s State Network, a project of The Digital Chamber, is a non-partisan program that establishes a collaborative ecosystem connecting policymakers, regulators, industry, and innovators to advance blockchain adoption and digital asset integration across the United States. 
 
ABOUT THE DIGITAL CHAMBER 

The Digital Chamber is a non-profit organization committed to promoting global blockchain adoption. We envision a fair and inclusive digital and financial ecosystem where everyone has the opportunity to participate. Access to digital assets is not merely a technological advancement but a fundamental human right, crucial for economic and social empowerment. Through targeted education, advocacy, and strategic collaborations with government and industry stakeholders, we drive innovation and shape policies that create a favorable environment for the blockchain technology ecosystem.  

The Digital Chamber’s umbrella includes: CryptoUK, Digital Power Network (DPN), TDC’s Digital State Network, and Treasury Council. 

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For media inquiries, contact press@digitalchamber.org   

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TDC’s State Network Announces its Newest Partner, Maryland Blockchain Association  

Agreement includes the first microgrant sponsorship from TDC’s State Network 

Washington, DC – (December 15, 2025) The Digital Chamber (TDC)’s State Network is pleased to announce its latest partner and the first microgrant recipient. The Maryland Blockchain Association (MDBA) has agreed to partner with TDC’s State Network to expand the reach of their work across Maryland to educate and advocate for fair, inclusive blockchain policies and laws.  

“Maryland has set a high bar for state innovation, which is critical to bridging knowledge gaps to advance emerging industries like digital assets and blockchain. The Maryland Blockchain Association has created a welcoming space for blockchain innovators to flourish,” said Cody Carbone, CEO of the Digital Chamber. “We are pleased to support their work, which will serve as a model for how TDC can plug into and strengthen the existing efforts of blockchain advocates, elevating the industry at the state level.”       

“The Maryland Blockchain Association is proud to join the Digital Chamber in support of advancing technology and digital asset compliance applications. As part of a growing statewide coalition, the Maryland Blockchain Association is proud to support Maryland’s education ecosystem by expanding access to blockchain and emerging technology learning opportunities for students, educators, and lifelong learners. Together with our partners, we are building future-ready pathways that prepare Marylanders for high-demand careers in the digital economy.” Jacqueline Cooper, CEO, Maryland Blockchain Association.  

TDC’s State Network microgrant to MDBA is the first in a pilot program designed to help groups involved in state and local blockchain education efforts to formally support their ongoing work. The program awards grants to state blockchain associations, university blockchain clubs, and community innovation groups to build a foundation for success across all 50 states.  

Specifically, small-dollar grants will be awarded to blockchain associations, university blockchain clubs, and community innovation groups in 2026. Formal application will open in January with more grants to be announced in March 2026 at the Digital Chamber’s annual Blockchain Summit.   

“The Microgrant Program means these critical grassroots groups that are often volunteer-led can gain access to funding needed to mobilize education and advocacy efforts in their home state that are key to the formation of principled, digital asset policy development,” said Anastasia Dellaccio, Executive Director of TDC’s State Network.   

TDC’s State Network, launched in 2025, extends support to states and local groups with similarly aligned goals. 

ABOUT TDC and TDC’s State Network  

The Digital Chamber is a non-profit organization committed to promoting global blockchain adoption. We envision a fair and inclusive digital and financial ecosystem where everyone has the opportunity to participate. Access to digital assets is not merely a technological advancement but a fundamental human right, crucial for economic and social empowerment. Through targeted education, advocacy, and strategic collaborations with government and industry stakeholders, we drive innovation and shape policies that create a favorable environment for the blockchain technology ecosystem.  

Major partners and affiliates of The Digital Chamber include: CryptoUK and Digital Power Network.
  

ABOUT MDBA  

The Maryland Blockchain Association is a nonprofit coalition advancing Bitcoin, blockchain, and Web3 innovation, policy, and education across Maryland. Its mission is to connect industry, government, and academia to foster responsible adoption, economic growth, and a skilled blockchain workforce in the state 

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CryptoUK Joins TDC as part of Expanded Global Advocacy Network 

Washington, DC – (December 9, 2025) The Digital Chamber (TDC) and CryptoUK today announced that CryptoUK will formally join The Digital Chamber, the largest digital asset and blockchain trade association in the United States, as part of an expanded global policy network. This move brings CryptoUK’s team, members, and policy expertise under The Digital Chamber umbrella and creates a unified, cross-border advocacy platform.

Bolstered by a new formal agreement, both entities share a mandate to advocate for responsible regulation that enables global blockchain and digital asset innovation to thrive while protecting consumers’ access to digital assets. 

“We are proud to welcome CryptoUK under The Digital Chamber umbrella. This move strengthens our ability to champion the work our members are building and to advocate for them across global markets,” said Cody Carbone, CEO of the Digital Chamber.

“CryptoUK has always aspired to ensure we are driven by policy-led issues, member collaboration, and regulatory engagement. These are the core pillars of the organisation. In The Digital Chamber, we see a like-minded organisation with shared objectives and approach,” said Crypto UK’s Executive Director, Su Carpenter.

“This move will strengthen both organisations by enabling cross-jurisdictional knowledge sharing and access to broader resources. At a critical time for UK-US regulatory coordination, we see this as an important step forward for our members and the wider digital asset industry,” added Carpenter.

This development follows TDC’s State Network launch in November and marks the next step in TDC’s strategy to unify advocacy at the state, federal, and international levels. 

“Effective digital asset policy requires borderless coordination, looking for opportunities in all governments and markets. CryptoUK is a proven leading voice in the UK, and we are excited to create such a strong bond to expand our global policy expertise,” Carbone added.

ABOUT TDC

The Digital Chamber is a non-profit organization committed to promoting global blockchain adoption. We envision a fair and inclusive digital and financial ecosystem where everyone has the opportunity to participate. Access to digital assets is not merely a technological advancement but a fundamental human right, crucial for economic and social empowerment. Through targeted education, advocacy, and strategic collaborations with government and industry stakeholders, we drive innovation and shape policies that create a favorable environment for the blockchain technology ecosystem.

Major partners and affiliates of The Digital Chamber include: CryptoUK, Digital Power Network, TDC’s State Network, and the Treasury Council.  

ABOUT CryptoUK

The UK’s leading trade association for crypto and digital assets since 2017, CryptoUK represents the digital asset sector, working with policymakers and market participants to shape balanced regulation and governance. It promotes industry growth through events, education, and advocacy, and serves as Secretariat for the Crypto and Digital Assets APPG.

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